Meth and cousins is what gets done in those there parts.
I mean you could have said that about the rest of the visible map there as well
Excuse me, but I happen to live in Oklahoma City and I really don’t appreciate how accurate you’re being right now…
My bad, if it’s any consolation I live in Idaho
Ah, the state named by the bitter ex of a girl named Ida!
Also dust bowls.
What’s the historical reason it wasn’t included in one of the other states?
When Texas sought to enter the Union in 1845 as a slave state, federal law in the United States, based on the Missouri Compromise, prohibited slavery north of 36°30’ parallel north. Under the Compromise of 1850, Texas surrendered its lands north of 36°30’ latitude.
Slavery, like usual, was the answer.
It has a lot to do with the US using Oklahoma as a dumping zone for first Americans and then over time taking even that from them piece by piece.
If your interested, Jonny Harris did a piece on it recently.
Here is an alternative Piped link(s): https://piped.video/d8-kGVCzKwA
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source, check me out at GitHub.
Panhandling
That’s where people drive when they want to avoid Texas’ draconian laws. Think of it as a neutral zone.
TIL you can cross between the border of Oklahoma and Colorado, technically…
You can go north from Texas to New Mexico
It is home to Hooker OK.
Ok, but there are also probably hookers in other parts.
War crimes
Former Texan here: slavery is why that exists. They ceded the land so they could enter the union as a slave state.
Oklahoman here! I’ve personally haven’t spent much time in this part of the state. It’s was historically referred to as “No Man’s Land” if that gives you any idea. The panhandle has a much more arid, high plains type climate than other parts of the state. I believe there are literal sand dunes out that way. Oklahoma’s highest point, Black Mesa, is in the panhandle. Im told Black Mesa is a great camping spot for star-gazing, but I’ve never been. As far as I’m aware it’s mostly right-wing but jobs living in that area. I seem to recall a few local news stories about people in that part of the state making a big stink about trans kids trying to use the bathroom and so forth.
As far as I’m aware it’s mostly right-wing (nut) jobs living in that area.
This is different from the rest of Oklahoma how?
Well, not really. Oklahoma is a deeply red state, but it is more liberal in areas like Oklahoma City, Tulsa, and the university towns. I’ve always gotten the impression that people living in the panhandle were a different breed of conservative psycho though.
Black Mesa is where Halflife is set, if that helps?
Black Mesa is the organization, IIRC. I had it in my head that the research facility was near Los Alamos, NM, but that might just be because I associate any theoretical physics research in a desert with Los Alamos.
Lol “right-wing butt jobs”
Weddings where everyone sits on the same side of the church and some of the worst maintained roads in America.
Then the terrible roads must somehow be the fault of "those libruls’, when there’s not a liberal in sight as far as the crow flies for a couple of days at least.
The Trump sign, flag, or bulletin board per square mile is unreal. I’ve driven through there a few times and I legit don’t feel safe.
They are incapable of understanding that it is the lack of progressive policies that keep their region a neglected backwater.
There are way too many big words in that sentence for them to have any hope of understanding. You’ve got to use little words and one concept at a time.
It’s pretty much the heart of where the dust bowl of the 1930s was. Most of the people who lived there left and never came back. They moved to places like Bakersfield, California, which is a big part of how you get the “Bakersfield Sound” in country music with guys like Buck Owens and Merle Haggard.
Wind, sand, dirt, and poverty
Panhandle behaviour!
How many sisters you got?